NEW YORK, NY.- In a 1980 interview, cellist Abdul Wadud laid out a musical manifesto, describing his expansive attitude toward the instrument he had spent decades mastering.
The cello, he said, can be anything that I want it to be.
Wadud wasnt just speaking theoretically. A few years earlier, he released a solo LP called By Myself on his own label, Bisharra (the name means good news in Arabic), that employed vigorous bowing, graceful pizzicato vamps and guitar-like strumming. Its holistic sound drew on his extensive experiences in both jazz and classical, as well as the rich array of Black music he absorbed growing up in Cleveland in the 1950s, and influences from, as he put it in the albums liner notes, Mother Africa.
Decades later, fellow musicians are still marveling at Waduds achievement. Hes turned the cello into an orchestra, said reed player and composer Marty Ehrlich, who worked with him for more than a decade.
Akua Dixon, a fellow genre-spanning cellist, who played with Wadud in ensembles including the String Reunion, an all-Black string orchestra, said: I think he just showed a direction into the galaxy. What planets you want to go to and stop on are your choice.
For decades, though, Waduds only solo album, and seemingly the first unaccompanied cello album to combine such disparate vocabularies, was nearly impossible to find. Initially pressed in a limited run Wadud once estimated between 500 and 1,000 the LP has long been out of print. For fans of the cellist, cassette dubs or vinyl-sourced MP3s were the only way to hear By Myself. The original album became a highly prized collectors item, with some copies fetching more than $800.
Now, the album is finally being reissued in an initial LP run of 2,000 copies, with accompanying digital and streaming releases by Gotta Groove Records, a vinyl pressing plant in Cleveland with an in-house imprint focusing on music with Ohio roots. (The original tapes have been restored and the sound subtly enhanced, though not technically remastered, according to the reissues executive producer, Matt Earley.)
Plans for the reissue were finalized in 2022, building on a relationship that began in 2019 when the cellist, by then resettled in his hometown, saw a local morning-news segment that mentioned the plant. He called Gotta Groove and expressed interest in re-pressing a self-released 1969 album by the Black Unity Trio, a free-jazz group he had been part of, in which he was credited under a version of his birth name, Ron DeVaughn. Coincidentally, that album, eventually reissued by Gotta Groove in 2020, had been at the top of Earleys Ohio-centric wish list.
Holy cow, Ive been trying to get ahold of you guys for three years, Earley recalled telling the cellist over the phone.
But less than three months after Wadud handed over the By Myself master tapes, he died at age 75 from complications of multiple illnesses.
The cellists son, R&B singer Raheem DeVaughn, sees the new edition of By Myself as key to preserving his fathers legacy. I think its going to warm his heart, he said, clarifying his belief that those who have died are still spiritually present. I think that its going to mean a lot to a lot of people around the world whose lives hes touched and changed and influenced.
Born in 1947, Wadud started out playing saxophone and picked up the cello in fourth grade. Nurtured by what he later called the dynamite music-education programs then available in Clevelands public schools, he went on to perform in local youth orchestras while also playing alto in a jazz combo. As a teenager, he discovered free jazz, inspired in part by Cleveland-born saxophonist Albert Ayler, and began exploring the style along with saxophonist Yusuf Mumin and the drummer then known as Haasan-Al-Hut, his bandmates in the Black Unity Trio.
By the 1970s, after earning bachelors and masters degrees in music performance, he was living in East Orange, New Jersey, and excelling as a member of the New Jersey Symphony, on Broadway and in studios, and on the cutting edge of the jazz avant-garde, with bandleaders including multi-instrumentalist Julius Hemphill and saxophonist Arthur Blythe.
In 1977, when he entered Manhattan studio Blank Tapes to record By Myself, he was ready to synthesize his various musical dialects. On Expansions, he sounds like a jazz bassist, walking a brisk line, before switching to arco and summoning scraping cries and heaving groans out of the strings. On Happiness, he uses the bow percussively, generating skipping rhythms and foreshadowing a statement he made about his instrument in the 1980 interview: If I want it to be a drum, it can be a drum.
As Janel Leppin, another adventurous cellist, said, Youre taught from a very young age, This is right and this is wrong, noting that Waduds album is just a really bold expression of eschewing all that baggage. James Newton, a flutist who collaborated extensively with Wadud, said the cellist brought African string-instrument techniques into his own language: In By Myself, I hear resonances of the kora, oud and molo, along with their American transplants, including the banjo and acoustic guitar, played with the slide.
Tomeka Reid, one of todays leading cellists in jazz and avant-garde music, agreed. His vehicle is a Western classical instrument, she said, but hes manifesting all of these sounds and experiences that he has as a Black man in America on this instrument.
The album uses cyclical meditative themes, reminiscent of the elemental bass vamps found in the work of Pharoah Sanders and other jazz seekers active during the same era, which artfully complement the more abstract passages. A particularly lovely line emerges on Camille, a track dedicated to Waduds wife at the time.
Camille is almost like a pop song, said Tom Skinner, a drummer who works in the Radiohead satellite the Smile as well as the combustible jazz outfit Sons of Kemet and cites By Myself as a key influence on his recent solo work. Its so melodic and heartfelt and catchy.
While the By Myself liner notes frame the record as the first part of a trilogy, no other Wadud solo albums emerged. The cellist remained busy with various appearances and collaborations until the early 90s, when he retired for good, later citing health issues and an overall feeling of burnout. In the decades that followed, a scattering of other unaccompanied cello albums have arrived from players operating in the jazz avant-garde, including Dave Hollands Life Cycle, David Eyges Wood and Erik Friedlanders Block Ice & Propane. But Waduds effort still stands as a landmark of self-determination, not just stylistically but also in its DIY production.
Raheem DeVaughn recalled once discussing By Myself with Camille, the tracks eponym. She was just telling me what it was like for my dad doing that album at that time, and him doing it by himself, he said. And just how important that was, for him to have ownership of his art at that time and go in the studio and pay for his own studio time and just control his destiny as an artist.
For Wadud, that independent streak seemed to have a higher purpose. In his By Myself liner notes, he expanded on what he called my mission. After outlining the various roles that the instrument could play, and stating his refusal to be hemmed in by its conventional functions, he went a step further. To try to free the instrument and the music, he wrote, and in so doing, try to help free US.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.